Thursday, December 14, 2017

Interior survey: Harassment, discrimination common among workers (and my solutions)

A survey conducted for the Interior Department found that 35 percent of its employees say they were harassed or discriminated against in the last year. The department-wide findings come on the heels of a National Park Service-specific report released in October, which found that 38 percent of that agency’s employees have been harassed or discriminated against. The most common form of harassment was age-related, with 20.5 percent of employees reporting it. Another 16.5 percent said they experienced gender-based harassment, 9.3 percent were harassed because of their race or ethnicity and 8 percent suffered from sexual harassment. Employee relations issues are often amplified at Interior’s agencies due to longstanding cultural structures, remote workplaces and similar unique circumstances...more

35 percent were harassed or discriminated against, yet they just moved into the top 10 best places to work?  And thanks to Zinke they can bring fido to work and practice shooting a big buck while eating lunch. It would appear that 35 percent need to switch to guard dogs and practice shooting human predators. That should lower the percentage drastically, plus you get to have great fun siccing your dog on the bastards or blowing them all to hell. Guard Dogs & Guns...that's the ticket.


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

All SNIVELING PUKES